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Maternal use of physical punishment in response to child misbehavior
The participators of physical punishment following individual research, was based on maternal attitude toward physical punishment, maternal perception of the seriousness and intent of the child misbehavior, and maternal anger in response to the child misbehavior.
Children are abused based on how the mothers or fathers feel. If they feel as though their child was too disrespectful or if their child had crossed the line then they had deserved themselves the dicipline they had recieved. -
Physical Discipline and Children's Adjustment: Cultural Normativeness as a Moderator
the study ranged of Children from the age of 6-17 and mothers 20-59 and it showed that physical discipline was less strongly associated with adverse child outcomes in conditions of greater perceived normativeness, but physical discipline was also associated with more adverse outcomes regardless of its perceived normativeness. -
Intersection of Child Abuse and Children's Exposure to Domestic Violence
The intersection of physical child abuse and domestic violence within the context of other risk factors, including community violence and related family and environmental stressors.
The factors of intervention of child abuse are community violence and related family and environmental stressors. Due to the place that these children are brought up in they are more prone to domestic violence. These -
Mothers of children with externalizing behavior problems
Using the conceptual framework of the Social Information Processing model (Milner, 1993 and Milner, 2000), associations between cognitive risk factors and child physical abuse risk and maladaptive discipline style and practices were examined in an at-risk population.
The Research in this study of child abuse prevention is more for the parents instead of the children. The children may be problematic or in other words troublesome but there are other methods of discipline.